Information is not representation but the interaction of one representation with that of another representation. — Pop
The problem with this is that it may run the risk of being dismissed by physicists who don’t see it as either empirically valid or philosophically coherent.
They may be wrong , but I think what you’re aiming for will be much between comprehended by others of you put more emphasis on the human behavioral implications of your theory ( emotion, intersubjective relations , cognition and perception , psychopathology, language , ethics). — Joshs
Wheeler said "it from bit", whilst Tononi sees everything as "integrated information", and tries to measure it with phi. — Pop
Can you measure a pattern? Say a square or a circle? What are the bits of a circle? — Prishon
Systems are informationally created bottom up, and then they interact laterally with all other systems in the same manner. They are totally enmeshed together. Movement in one system spreads throughout the others, causing what is popularly known as the Butterfly effect. — Pop
Movement in one system spreads throughout the others, causing what is popularly known as the Butterfly effect. — Pop
The butterfly effect makes them diverge away from each other. The need each other to realize themselves. A bee is the same as a whale and at the same time completely different. You're not alone... :smile: — MikeBlender
This concept from dynamical systems is sometimes assumed to exist in many if not all circumstances. In fact, the opposite can occur: disturbances in one area fritter out and don't really affect other areas. Or, as Stanislaw Lem conjectured, certain movements have lives of their own and are relatively immune to minor disturbances. Rise of the Third Reich, etc. — jgill
the evolutionary interaction of form — Pop
One thing's for sure, we can define information any which way we want. — TheMadFool
I don't think this is true. Information is a very difficult thing to define, because everything is information. Other definitions do not recognize this, so it is very difficult to understand how information works to enact us in the world. How information is something that is incorporated into the person that we become. How there is nothing outside of information.
Integrated Information Theory tells us that consciousness exists as moments of integrated information. Systems Theory tells us that interaction is information, and nothing exists outside of interaction. Enactivism tells us that we are enacted / interacted in the world informationally, and Constructivism tells us that it is a body of integrated information that becomes knowledge, in an evolving and idiosyncratic fashion and what we are is a product of this. All that is missing is a definition of this information, and I think this one fills the bill — Pop
My approach is scientific to the extent I'm capable of that. Your idea of what information differs from the standard set down by Claude Shannon. I reckon that Shannon too must've wondered about how information could be defined - there are so many ways, yours included - but he settled for one that could be quantified (measured) and also had just enough philosophy (uncertainty) to silence his critics. — TheMadFool
because everything is information. — Pop
Shannon did not define information. He quantified it. There is a very important difference. — Pop
Do you think even an elementary particle is information? — MikeBlender
I can't seem to tell the difference. Kindly edify me. — TheMadFool
It used to be that everything was matter, then due to Maxwell, Einstein, and Rutherford, etc. matter became equal to energy — Pop
But energy is a particle too. Photons are pure energy, not moving in time. The can give their energy, their pure energy to massive particles like electrons which change their state of motion (the pure energy, kinetic energy through space only, is changed in kinetic energy through space and time). I can't see information in a single isolated particle. If non-interacting its wavefunction will get dispersed over space (or localized in momentum space). — MikeBlender
How will you know about it without the information describing it? — Pop
Shannon's theory tells you how to quantify the amount of information traveling over a wire. — Pop
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